cover image The Money-Saving Garden Year: A Month-by-Month Guide to a Great Garden That Costs Less

The Money-Saving Garden Year: A Month-by-Month Guide to a Great Garden That Costs Less

Anya Lautenbach. DK, $21.99 (192p) ISBN 978-0-593-96761-4

This helpful manual from Lautenbach (The Money-Saving Gardener) details how to grow flowers and other flora year-round. Listing which plants bloom each month, she notes that crocuses and snowdrops flower in February and that hydrangeas and helenium blossom in August. She discusses when to sow seeds, recommending readers plant bishop’s flower and cupid’s dart in March, and rockcress and Canterbury bells in June. Money-saving tips show how to make biodegradable seed pots from cardboard or large leaves and how to keep harmful aphid populations in check by attracting birds with berry-producing shrubs. To reduce the number of seeds one needs to buy, Lautenbach provides detailed guidance on numerous propagation techniques. For instance, she discusses how to take softwood cuttings by lopping off a non-flowering shoot, removing lower leaves to reduce the shoot’s water needs, and placing it in a pot with moist soil. Lautenbach also provides instructions for how to propagate roses from a bouquet; find seedlings in the wild for replanting; and create a hanging basket featuring thyme, oregano, and other herbs. There’s not much guidance on how to sow seeds or care for plants, but the extensive background on propagating cuttings makes up for that oversight. Gardeners will take to this. (Dec.)